Buried in the announcement of its new flagship phone, LG's Nexus 4, is the news that the device won't connect to LTE. Instead, the phone is stuck on HSPA+ networks, which some carriers still label 4G, but tend to run a lot slower than LTE.

Android head Andy Rubin calls the lack of LTE a "tactical issue," and cites cost and battery life as major concerns with devices that have to support multiple radios. "A lot of the networks that have deployed LTE haven't scaled completely yet — they're hybrid networks [...] which means the devices need both radios built into them," he said. "When we did the Galaxy Nexus with LTE we had to do just that, and it just wasn't a great user experience." But the reality now is that many LTE devices — including the iPhone 5 and the LG Optimus G, which shares common hardware with the Nexus 4 — use larger batteries and newer, more efficient chips to balance the power draw from LTE.

What it boils down to is this: Google still doesn't have the muscle to convince carriers to sell its Nexus phones right off the bat. And it's not willing to negotiate with carriers to bring the best possible hardware to consumers.

There's no getting around it, this is a big embarrassment for Google. Although the carriers are mostly to blame, the bottom line is that Google's new flagship phone for the next year will be outdated hardware the moment it's released.

Recommended For You

The Board Room

Editors' Picks

How true. What a shame. I was looking forward to getting a Nexus phone. Now I have to go running back to the carrier phones with their ridiculous skins and update schedules if I want LTE. A company with any business sense wouldn't force me to make that decision. If Apple can convince the phone companies to subsidize and sell their phone, why can't Google? Maybe if enough people refused to buy the new Nexus 4, Google would see the folly of their ways.